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Hitler's Air Bridges - The Luftwaffe's Supply Operations of the Second World War (Hardcover)
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Hitler's Air Bridges - The Luftwaffe's Supply Operations of the Second World War (Hardcover)
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Much has been written about the famous fighters and bombers of the
Luftwaffe which proved so successful in the invasion of Poland, the
Battle of France, the Battle of Britain and in the early operations
in Eastern Europe. Little attention, however, has been focused on
the Luftwaffe's transport aircraft which played a vital role in
supplying German forces in every theatre. In early May 1940, the
battle of Norway was nearing its climax, but General Eduard Dietl's
3rd J ger division was blocked by the Allies in the Narvik area.
Only the Luftwaffe could provide effective assistance to the
encircled troops. The special purpose groups KGr.zbV107 and
KGr.zbV108 were ordered to supply the division by air. Transports
delivered ammunition, food, and even boots for German sailors who
found themselves on land. This was the first of a number of
occasions in which the Luftwaffe's transport Gruppen, often
equipped with the slow, but reliable Junkers 52, created an air
bridge' to supply troops cut off or surrounded by the enemy. The
transport Gruppen had previously been involved in supporting the
advance of German forces during the Polish campaign, this being
followed by the capture of Denmark, The Netherlands, Belgium, and
Greece. During Operation Barbarossa, German troops were dispersed
over the vast expanses of Russia. It was a country without roads
where the normal supply by trucks and trains to the troops was
difficult and sometimes impossible. Often, it was only the
Luftwaffe's transport aircraft that kept the Germans fighting. But
with Hitler's insistence that there should be no retreat despite
the overwhelming strength of the Soviet forces, his Germans armies
found themselves surrounded and the Luftwaffe had to create air
bridges to supply the beleaguered troops. Nowhere was this more
evident than the Battle of Stalingrad, Goring having convinced
Hitler that the Luftwaffe was capable of keeping the Sixth Army
supplied. As the war increasingly turned against the Third Reich,
air bridges were vital in supporting and maintaining its garrisons
in places such as Demyansk, Holm, Korsun, Budapest, Breslau, and
many others. Hitler's Air Bridges presents the story of the
Luftwaffe's transport Gruppen more extensively and in greater
detail than ever before.
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